Cognitive Path Planning With Spatial Memory Distortion.
Journal
IEEE transactions on visualization and computer graphics
ISSN: 1941-0506
Titre abrégé: IEEE Trans Vis Comput Graph
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 9891704
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
Aug 2023
Aug 2023
Historique:
medline:
3
7
2023
pubmed:
1
4
2022
entrez:
31
3
2022
Statut:
ppublish
Résumé
Human path-planning operates differently from deterministic AI-based path-planning algorithms due to the decay and distortion in a human's spatial memory and the lack of complete scene knowledge. Here, we present a cognitive model of path-planning that simulates human-like learning of unfamiliar environments, supports systematic degradation in spatial memory, and distorts spatial recall during path-planning. We propose a Dynamic Hierarchical Cognitive Graph (DHCG) representation to encode the environment structure by incorporating two critical spatial memory biases during exploration: categorical adjustment and sequence order effect. We then extend the "Fine-To-Coarse" (FTC), the most prevalent path-planning heuristic, to incorporate spatial uncertainty during recall through the DHCG. We conducted a lab-based Virtual Reality (VR) experiment to validate the proposed cognitive path-planning model and made three observations: (1) a statistically significant impact of sequence order effect on participants' route-choices, (2) approximately three hierarchical levels in the DHCG according to participants' recall data, and (3) similar trajectories and significantly similar wayfinding performances between participants and simulated cognitive agents on identical path-planning tasks. Furthermore, we performed two detailed simulation experiments with different FTC variants on a Manhattan-style grid. Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed cognitive path-planning model successfully produces human-like paths and can capture human wayfinding's complex and dynamic nature, which traditional AI-based path-planning algorithms cannot capture.
Identifiants
pubmed: 35358048
doi: 10.1109/TVCG.2022.3163794
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM